Sampling regional spirits, liqueurs a cultural experience

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Finishing dinner at Rome's Ristorante da Fortunato, my friend Stefano explains that his greatest joy is an after-dinner drink called grappa. I try my best to enjoy the local firewater and fail. Sipping the grappa, Stefano instructs me: "You must not be in a hurry when taking a grappa." He savours it carefully, sniffing the aroma and lingering over every taste. He then tells me that his ultimate joy is to have a glass of grappa - and a Tuscan cigar - while cruising on his sailboat to Corsica.

And so it goes all over Europe. Each nation has its own brand of moon-shine - a distilled concoction that burns your throat, waters your eyes, and clouds your mind till you think you can drink like you're a native. Trying these regionally produced spirits and liqueurs can be a great cultural experience - and brings out fun and fascinating facets of my favourite continent.

While many North Americans are familiar with whiskies and brandies, there's a cornucopia of other specialty spirits in Europe, many made from fruits. Italy's grappa, for example, is made from winemaking leftovers - skins, pulp, seeds, and stems - distilled into a clear, potent brew. If you can't take it straight, try a shot of it in a cup of espresso, which the Italians call "caffè corretto".

"Ginjinha" is one of my favourite Portuguese drinks. This sweet liqueur is made from the sour, cherry-like ginja berry, sugar, and alcohol. It's sold for less than $2 a shot in funky old shops throughout Portugal. Buy it with or without berries ("com elas" or "sem elas" - that's "with them" or "without them") and "gelada" (if you want it poured from a chilled bottle - very nice).

In Greece, cloudy, anise-flavoured ouzo, supposedly invented by monks on Mount Athos, is worth a try even if you don't like the taste of black lic-orice. Similar to its Mediterranean cousins, French "pastis" and Turkish "raki," ouzo turns from clear to milky white when you add ice or water (don't drink it straight). Greeks drink it both as an aperitif and with food.

Each Eastern European country has its own distinctive firewater, most of them a variation on slivovitz - a plum brandy so highly valued that it's the de facto currency of the Carpathian Mountains (often used for bartering with farmers and other mountain folk).

In Hungary, for a more straightforward spirit, try "pálinka," a powerful drink made from various fruits, most often "szilva" (plums) or "barrack" (apricots).

In Germany and Austria, put down your beer stein and sample some schnapps. One of the best places for Teutonic homebrew is Salzburg, Austria. Look for Sporer on the city's main drag; it's a family-run distillery and retail shop that's been around for a century. Their many firewaters are in jugs at the end of the bar: "Nuss" is nut, "Marillen" is apricot (typical of this region), the "Kletzen" cocktail is like a super-thick Baileys with pear, and "Edle Brande" are the stronger schnapps.

One of the most notorious European specialty drinks is absinthe, the highly alcoholic, herb-based beverage popular among artists and writers in the late 1800s. Van Gogh and Gauguin had their falling out thanks, in part, to a night of absinthe drinking. That same night, Van Gogh sliced off part of his earlobe and presented it to a prostitute.

Considered dangerously addictive, absinthe was banned in 1915 but is legal again in France. There's a ritual to drinking it that requires a special glass and a slotted spoon. First pour a shot of absinthe into the glass; then place a sugar cube on the spoon and trickle cold water slowly through the cube into the drink. The green liquid turns cloudy as the sugary water releases the scents of absinthe's main flavourings - wormwood, anise, and fennel.

If you want to know more about "la fée verte" (the green fairy, absinthe's nickname), visit the Musée de l'Absinthe in Auvers-sur-Oise, north-west of Paris. It's located here for a reason: Auvers is also the site of Van Gogh's suicide and grave.

Compared to the Goth green of absinthe, "limoncello" is like bottled sunshine.

This is Italy's candy-like liqueur made from lemons. Italy is one of the world's largest producers of lemons, and its Sorrento area specializes in limoncello. Sip it chilled after dinner for a "bella Italia" experience.

While taste-testing your way through Europe is fun, there's another reason for bar-hopping: You're sharing the local stuff with local people in local bars. So ask that person sitting nearby to suggest his or her favourite. It may singe your eyebrows, but you'll never forget it.

Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

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